ResearchScience

Brain’s Leptin-Sensitive Cells Found to Suppress Anxiety, Enabling Exploration and Feeding in Stressful Environments

A specialized group of neurons in the brain’s lateral hypothalamus expressing leptin receptors actively reduces anxiety to promote exploration and feeding in exposed areas, according to a new study. The research reveals how these cells counteract prefrontal anxiety signals, enabling animals to adapt behavior in stressful environments. These findings may provide insights into anxiety and restrictive eating disorders.

Neural Circuitry That Counters Anxiety Identified

Scientists have discovered a specific population of neurons in the lateral hypothalamus that counteracts anxiety to enable exploration of exposed areas and feeding in threatening environments, according to research published in Nature Neuroscience. These leptin receptor-expressing (LepR) neurons show increased activity when animals venture into anxiety-provoking spaces, and their artificial activation reduces anxiety-related behaviors while enabling adaptive responses.

Anomalies and Alternative ScienceHealth

** Alzheimer’s May Not Be a Brain Disease, Expert Reveals – New Immune System Theory Emerges

** A leading neuroscientist proposes Alzheimer’s disease is primarily a disorder of the brain’s immune system, not a brain disease. This revolutionary theory challenges decades of beta-amyloid research and could unlock new treatment possibilities for millions affected by Alzheimer’s worldwide. **CONTENT:**

Alzheimer’s disease may not actually be a brain disease at all, according to groundbreaking new research that challenges decades of scientific consensus. Instead, emerging evidence suggests Alzheimer’s could primarily be a disorder of the immune system within the brain – a paradigm shift that could revolutionize how we understand and treat this devastating condition that affects millions worldwide.